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George Heriot's School

George Heriot's School is a Scottish private primary and secondary day school on Lauriston Place in the Old Town of Edinburgh, Scotland. In the early 21st century, it has more than 1600 pupils, 155 teaching staff, and 80 non-teaching staff.[2] It was established in 1628 as George Heriot's Hospital, by bequest of the royal goldsmith George Heriot,[3] and opened in 1659. It is governed by George Heriot's Trust, a Scottish charity.[4]

George Heriot's School
Address
Lauriston Place

,
EH3 9EQ

Scotland
Coordinates55°56′45″N 3°11′40″W / 55.945918°N 3.194317°W / 55.945918; -3.194317Coordinates: 55°56′45″N 3°11′40″W / 55.945918°N 3.194317°W / 55.945918; -3.194317
Information
Former nameGeorge Heriot's Hospital
TypePrivate day school[1]
MottoImpendo
(I Distribute Chearfullie)
Established1628; 395 years ago (1628)
FounderGeorge Heriot
OversightGeorge Heriot's Trust
Chairman of GovernorsJoyce Cullen
PrincipalGareth Warren
Staffapprox. 80
Teaching staff155
GenderCo-educational
Age3 to 18
Enrolmentapprox. 1600
HousesCastle   Greyfriars   Lauriston   Raeburn  
Colour(s)Navy Blue, White
   
SongThe Merry Month of June
PublicationThe Herioter
Websitewww.george-heriots.com

Architecture

 
George Heriot's School, south side facing Lauriston Place (rear)
 
The Quadrangle, the north-west turret in the centre.

The main building of the school is notable for its renaissance architecture, the work of William Wallace, until his death in 1631.[5] He was succeeded as master mason by William Aytoun, who was succeeded in turn by John Mylne.[6][7] In 1676, Sir William Bruce drew up plans for the completion of Heriot's Hospital. His design, for the central tower of the north façade, was eventually executed in 1693.[8]

The school is a turreted building surrounding a large quadrangle, and built out of sandstone.[9] The foundation stone is inscribed with the date 1628. The intricate decoration above each window is unique (with one paired exception - those on the ground floor either side of the now redundant central turret on the west side of the building). A statue of the founder can be found in a niche on the north side of the quadrangle.

The main building was the first large building to be constructed outside the Edinburgh city walls. It is located next to Greyfriars Kirk, built in 1620, in open grounds overlooked by Edinburgh Castle directly to the north. Parts of the seventeenth-century city wall (the Telfer Wall) serve as the walls of the school grounds. When built, the building's front facade faced north with access from the Grassmarket by way of Heriot Bridge. It was originally the only facade fronted in fine ashlar stone, the others being harled rubble. "George Heriot's magnificent pile" became known locally, and by the boys who attended it, as the "Wark".[10]

In 1833 the three rubble facades were refaced in Craigleith ashlar stone. This was done because the other facades had become more visible when a new entrance was installed on Lauriston Place. The refacing work was handled by Alexander Black, then Superintendent of Works for the school. He later designed the first Heriot's free schools around the city.

The south gatehouse onto Lauriston Place is by William Henry Playfair and dates from 1829. The chapel interior (1837) is by James Gillespie Graham, who is likely to have been assisted by Augustus Pugin. The school hall was designed by Donald Gow in 1893 and boasts a hammerbeam roof. A mezzanine floor was added later. The science block is by John Chesser (architect) and dates from 1887, incorporating part of the former primary school of 1838 by Alexander Black (architect). The chemistry block to the west of the site was designed by John Anderson in 1911.[8]

The grounds contain a selection of other buildings of varying age; these include a wing by inter-war school specialists Reid & Forbes, and a swimming pool, now unused. A 1922 granite war memorial, by James Dunn, is dedicated to the school's former pupils and teachers who died in World War I. Alumni and teachers who died in World War II were also added to the memorial.

History

 
Statue of George Heriot in the quadrangle

17th and 18th centuries

On his death in 1624, George Heriot left just over 23,625 pounds sterling – equivalent to about £3 million in 2017 – to found a "hospital" (a charitable school) on the model of Christ's Hospital in London, to care for the "puir, faitherless bairns" (Scots: poor, fatherless children) and children of "decayit" (fallen on hard times) burgesses and freemen of Edinburgh.[11][12][13]

The construction of Heriot's Hospital (as it was first called) was begun in 1628, just outside the city walls of Edinburgh. It was completed in time to be occupied by Oliver Cromwell's English forces during the invasion of Scotland during the Third English Civil War. When the building was used as a barracks, Cromwell's forces stabled their horses in the chapel. The hospital opened in 1659, with thirty sickly children in residence. As its finances grew, it took in other pupils in addition to the orphans for whom it was intended.

By the end of the 18th century, the Governors of the George Heriot's Trust had purchased the Barony of Broughton, thus acquiring extensive land for feuing (a form of leasehold) on the northern slope below James Craig's Georgian New Town. This and other land purchases beyond the original city boundary generated considerable revenue through leases for the Trust long after Heriot's death.

19th and 20th centuries

In 1846 there was an insurrection in the Hospital and fifty-two boys were dismissed.[14] This was the worst of several disturbances in the 1840s. Critics of hospital education blamed what they described as the monastic separation of the boys from home life. Only a minority (52 out of 180 in 1844) were fatherless, which meant, these critics argued, that poorer families were leaving their children to Hospital care, even through holiday periods, and the influence of disaffected older boys. 'Auld Callants' (former pupils) were prepared to defend the Hospital as a source of hope and discipline to families in difficulties. This argument about the value of hospitals, which reached the pages of The Times in late 1846,[15] was taken up by Duncan McLaren when he became Lord Provost of Edinburgh, and therefore Chairman of the Hospital Governors, in 1851. McLaren pushed for the number of boys in the Hospital to be reduced and for the Heriot outdoor schools to be expanded with the resources thus saved.[16]

Duncan McLaren was the primary initiator of the 1836 Act that gave the Heriot Governors the power to use the Heriot Trust's surplus to set up "outdoor" (i.e. outside the Hospital) schools.[17] Between 1838 and 1885 the Trust set up and ran 13 juvenile and 8 infant outdoor schools across Edinburgh.[18][19] At its height in the early 1880s this network of Heriot schools, which did not charge any fees, had a total roll of almost 5,000 pupils. The outdoor Heriot school buildings were sold off or rented out (some to the Edinburgh School Board) when the network was wound up after 1885 as part of reforms to the Trust and the absorption of its outdoor activities by the public school system.[20] Several of these buildings, including the Cowgate, Davie Street, Holyrood and Stockbridge Schools, were designed with architectural features copied from the Lauriston Place Hospital building or stonework elements referring to George Heriot.[21]

George Heriot’s Hospital was at the centre of the controversies surrounding Scottish educational endowments between the late 1860s and the mid 1880s. At a time when general funding for secondary education was not politically possible, reform of these endowments was seen as a way to facilitate access beyond elementary education.[22] The question was, for whom; those who could afford to pay fees or those who could not? The Heriot’s controversy was therefore a central issue in Edinburgh municipal politics at this time. In 1875 a Heriot Trust Defence Committee (HTDC) was formed in opposition to the recommendations of the (Colebrooke) Commission on Endowed Schools and Hospitals, set up in 1872. These included making the Hospital a secondary technical day school, using Heriot money to fund university scholarships, introducing fees for the outdoor schools and accepting foundationers from outside Edinburgh. The HTDC saw this as a spoliation of Edinburgh’s poor to the benefit of the middle classes.[23] Already in 1870, under the permissive Endowed Institutions (Scotland) Act of the previous year, and again in 1879 to the (Moncreiff) Commission on Endowed Institutions in Scotland, and finally in 1883 to the (Balfour) Commission on Educational Endowments, Heriot’s submitted schemes of reform. All were turned down. The reasons included Heriot’s continuing commitment to free and hospital education, and its maintenance of the Heriot outdoor schools after the passage of the Education (Scotland) Act in 1872 brought in publicly supported, compulsory elementary education. The Balfour Commission had executive powers and used these in 1885 to impose reform on Heriot’s. The Hospital became a day school, charging a modest fee, for boys of 10 and above. Up to 120 foundationers, no younger than 7 years of age, enjoyed preferential admission. Greek was not to be taught. The new George Heriot's Hospital School was, in other words, to be a modern, technically oriented institution. The outdoor school network was to be wound up and the resources used for a variety of scholarships and bursaries, including a number to be used for attendance at the High School and University of Edinburgh. These, rather than the new Heriot's day school, were to provide a path to university education for those able and interested.[24] There were elements in this scheme of a response to contemporary European educational reforms, such as that exemplified by the German Realschulen.[23]

The most uncontroversial aspect of the Balfour Commission’s scheme of 1885 for the reform of the Heriot's Hospital and Trust was the takeover of the "Watt Institution and School of Arts" by the Trust.[25] This was to be renamed the Heriot-Watt College. This was not just a matter of the Trust providing financial support, but was part of a policy of encouraging technical education in Edinburgh. Provision was especially to be made for pupils to continue their studies after completing the higher classes of the new Heriot’s day school. The School and the College were both run under the Heriot board of governors until the development and financial needs of the College required a separation in 1927. The Trust continued to make a contribution to the College of £8,000 p.a. thereafter.[26] In 1966 the College was granted university status as Heriot-Watt University.

In 1979 Heriot's became co-educational after admitting girls. In the same year Lothian Regional Council attempted to bring the school in to the local authority system, but the Secretary of State for Scotland intervened.[27]

 
Front view of Heriot's Hospital

Modern era

In the early 21st century, George Heriot's has approximately 1600 pupils. It continues to serve its charitable goal by providing free education to children who are bereaved of a parent, such children being referred to as "foundationers".[28] In 2012, the school was ranked as Edinburgh's best performing school by Higher exam results.[29]

 
Heriot's Hospital, Edinburgh by Henry Fox Talbot, 1844

Headmasters and principals

 
Rugby team of Serbian students at George Heriot's school in 1918

Chronological list of the headmasters of the school, the year given being the one in which they took office.[30]

  • 1659 James Lawson
  • 1664 David Davidsone
  • 1669 David Browne
  • 1670 William Smeaton
  • 1673 Harry Moresone
  • 1699 James Buchan
  • 1702 John Watson
  • 1720 David Chrystie
  • 1734 William Matheson
  • 1735 John Hunter
  • 1741 William Halieburton
  • 1741 John Henderson
  • 1757 James Colvill
  • 1769 George Watson
  • 1773 William Hay
  • 1782 Thomas Thomson
  • 1792 David Cruikshank
  • 1794 James Maxwell Cockburn
  • 1795 George Irvine
  • 1805 John Somerville
  • 1816 John Christison
  • 1825 James Boyd
  • 1829 Hector Holme
  • 1839 William Steven
  • 1844 James Fairburn
  • 1854 Frederick W. Bedford
  • 1880 David Fowler Lowe
  • 1908 John Brown Clark
  • 1926 William Gentle
  • 1942 William Carnon
  • 1947 William Dewar
  • 1970 Allan McDonald
  • 1983 Keith Pearson
  • 1997 Alistair Hector


Thereafter, the title of Headmaster was changed to that of Principal.

  • 2014 (January) Gareth Doodes[31]
  • 2014 (September) Cameron Wyllie (Acting)
  • 2014 (December) Cameron Wyllie[32]
  • 2018 (January) Mrs Lesley Franklin
  • 2021 (August) Gareth Warren[33]

Other notable staff

  • James Craik, Classics, c.1822 to c.1832
  • John Watt Butters, Maths, 1888 to 1899
  • James Stagg, Science, 1921 to 1923
  • Donald Hastie, Games, 1949 to 1979[34] Hastie was reportedly the first full-time games master in Scotland.[35]
  • Ray Milne, French and German, 1974 to 1978
  • Sam Mort, English and Drama (1997 to 2001),[36] in 2021 Unicef chief of Communication, Advocacy and Civic Engagement in Afghanistan [37]

Sports and extra-curricular activities

Former pupils' clubs, the Heriot's Rugby Club and Heriot's Cricket Club, carry the School's name and use the School's Goldenacre grounds. George Heriot's School Rowing Club competes at a national level and is affiliated to Scottish Rowing. There is a pipe band, and around 120 pupils take tuition of some kind.[38]

Notable alumni

 
Carving of a 17th-century classroom with a dominie and his ten scholars. Positioned at the school's main entrance, the motto reads, DEVS NOBIS HAEC OTIA FECIT - "God hath given us this leisure"..

Academia and Science

Media and Arts

Law and Politics

Sports

Military

Religion

Other

References

  1. ^ . Scottish Schools Online. Archived from the original on 4 April 2013. Retrieved 13 May 2013.
  2. ^ "Facilities and Staff". George Heriot's School. Retrieved 13 May 2013.
  3. ^ . George Heriot's School. Archived from the original on 12 May 2017. Retrieved 13 May 2013.
  4. ^ "Governance page on official website, accessed 16 April 2018".
  5. ^ Colvin, Howard (1978). A Biographical Dictionary of British Architects 1600-1840. John Murray. ISBN 9780719533280.
  6. ^ Colvin, Howard (1978). A Biographical Dictionary of British Architects 1600-1840. John Murray. pp. 569–70. ISBN 9780719533280.
  7. ^ McWilliam, Colin; Walker, David; Gifford, John (1984). The Buildings of Scotland: Edinburgh. Penguin. pp. 179–82.
  8. ^ a b McWilliam, Colin; Walker, David; Gifford, John (1984). The Buildings of Scotland: Edinburgh. Penguin. p. 180.
  9. ^ . George Heriot's School. Archived from the original on 15 May 2017. Retrieved 13 May 2013.
  10. ^ "Entry and example (from The Scotsman of 3 September 1910) for "wark"". Dictionary of the Scots Language. Retrieved 13 January 2021.
  11. ^ Lockhart, Brian (2003). Jinglin' Geordie's Legacy. East Linton: Tuckwell. p. 326. ISBN 1-86232-257-0.
  12. ^ "National Archives". Currency Converter: 1270-2017. Retrieved 11 January 2021.
  13. ^ Dewar, William (5 February 1979). "Letter to the Editor". The Scotsman.
  14. ^ Gilbert, William Matthews (1901). Edinburgh in the Nineteenth Century. J. & R. Allan. p. 116.
  15. ^ "London Times". 26 December 1846. Retrieved 14 January 2021.
  16. ^ Lockhart, Brian (2003). Jinglin' Geordie's Legacy. East Linton: Tuckwell Press. pp. 151–159. ISBN 1-86232-257-0.
  17. ^ Mackie, J.B. (1888). The Life and Work of Duncan McLaren. London: Nelson. pp. 133–138 (Vol 1).
  18. ^ Rodger, Richard (2001). The Transformation of Edinburgh: Land, Property and Trust in the Nineteenth Century. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 112–113. ISBN 978-0521602822.
  19. ^ Bedford, Frederick (1878). History of George Heriot's Hospital and the Heriot Foundation Schools (Third/Supplement ed.). Edinburgh. pp. 3–26.
  20. ^ Stephen, Walter (1996). Fabric and Function: A Century of School Building in Edinburgh, 1872-1972. Edinburgh: Hills of Home (private). p. 22.
  21. ^ Rodger, Richard (2001). The Transformation of Edinburgh: Land, Property and Trust in the Nineteenth Century. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 115. ISBN 978-0521602822.
  22. ^ Anderson, R. D. (1983). Education and Opportunity in Victorian Scotland. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. pp. 168–201. ISBN 085224617X.
  23. ^ a b "Report on public meeting". Edinburgh Courant. 15 October 1875.
  24. ^ Scheme for the Management of the Endowments ... known as George Heriot his Hospital, and the Watt Institution and School of Arts. London: Hansard: Parliamentary Papers. 5 June 1885. pp. paras 27–56.
  25. ^ Scheme for the Management of the Endowments ... known as George Heriot his Hospital, and the Watt Institution and School of Arts. London: Hansard: Parliamentary Papers. 5 June 1885. pp. paras 57–75.
  26. ^ Lockhart, Brian (2003). Jinglin' Geordie's Legacy. East Linton: Tuckwell Press. pp. 267–268. ISBN 1-86232-257-0.
  27. ^ McConnell, Tom (12 September 1980). "Younger in move over Heriot's". The Glasgow Herald. p. 3. Retrieved 9 August 2022.
  28. ^ "Foundation400". Retrieved 17 November 2022.
  29. ^ . Archived from the original on 5 March 2016. Retrieved 22 July 2015.
  30. ^ Jinglin' Geordie's Legacy, 2009, Brain Lockhart, ISBN 978-1862322578 page 333
  31. ^ Appointment of Principal. "George Heriot's School". Retrieved 13 May 2013.
  32. ^ Appointment of Principal. "George Heriot's School" (PDF). Retrieved 16 December 2014.
  33. ^ "Announcement from David Glen, Chairman of the Board of Governors - 31 December 2020". www.morrisonsacademy.org. Retrieved 4 August 2021.
  34. ^ ""Donald Hastie"". The Herioter: 9–11. July 1979.
  35. ^ Lockhart, Brian (2003). Jinglin' Geordie's Legacy. East Linton: Tuckwell. p. 279. ISBN 1-86232-257-0.
  36. ^ The Herioter (2001). Edinburgh: George Heriot's School. 2001.
  37. ^ "Scots aid worker stays in Kabul to continue working with Unicef". The National. Retrieved 6 September 2021.
  38. ^ . Archived from the original on 4 June 2012.
  39. ^ Professor Kenneth McColl, Professor Henry Dargie (19 May 2008) [originally published (sans commentary by McColl & Dargie) in The Herald 9 October 2007]. "Obituary - Professor Sir Abraham Goldberg - Physician, scientist and academic" (PDF). Royal Society of Edinburgh. Retrieved 30 November 2008.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)[permanent dead link]
  40. ^ Gowenlock, Brian G; B J Aylett; J C Bevington; D C Bradley; T S West; W P Richards; A G Hector (18 August 2004). (PDF). Royal Society of Edinburgh. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 October 2006. Retrieved 30 November 2008.
  41. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Spellbinding times at Heriot's". The Scotsman. 13 August 2009. Retrieved 28 October 2018.
  42. ^ "Duncan Hendry obituary". ISSN 0140-0460. Retrieved 18 March 2023.
  43. ^ "englishGHS on Twitter: "Wonderful to see @KermodeMovie putting Aftersun, written and directed by former @George_Heriots pupil Charlotte Wells, as best film of 2022. A terrific film - moving and unforgettable."". Twitter. Retrieved 2 January 2023.
  44. ^ Leask, David (1 June 2015). "Analysis: SNP bucks trend for privately educated MPs". The Scotsman.
  45. ^ The Law Times. London: The Law Times. 1892. p. 151.
  46. ^ "My Life in Rugby: Kenny Milne – former Scotland & Heriot's hooker". 25 October 2016.
  47. ^ . British and Irish Lions. Archived from the original on 24 October 2008. Retrieved 30 November 2008.
  48. ^ Connor, Jeff (22 February 2001). Giants of Scottish Rugby. Edinburgh, Scotland: Mainstream Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84018-478-5.
  49. ^ "Obituaries:Colonel Clive Fairweather". Daily Telegraph. 15 October 2012. Retrieved 15 October 2012.
  50. ^ Holgate, Andrew (15 February 2005). "Biography: John The Painter by Jessica Warner". London: The Times Online. Retrieved 22 December 2008.
  51. ^ "Hippolyte Jean Blanc". Retrieved 9 March 2014.
  52. ^ "Stuart Lowe Harris". Dictionary of Scottish Architects. Retrieved 31 May 2021.

External links

george, heriot, school, scottish, private, primary, secondary, school, lauriston, place, town, edinburgh, scotland, early, 21st, century, more, than, 1600, pupils, teaching, staff, teaching, staff, established, 1628, george, heriot, hospital, bequest, royal, g. George Heriot s School is a Scottish private primary and secondary day school on Lauriston Place in the Old Town of Edinburgh Scotland In the early 21st century it has more than 1600 pupils 155 teaching staff and 80 non teaching staff 2 It was established in 1628 as George Heriot s Hospital by bequest of the royal goldsmith George Heriot 3 and opened in 1659 It is governed by George Heriot s Trust a Scottish charity 4 George Heriot s SchoolAddressLauriston PlaceOld Town Edinburgh EH3 9EQScotlandCoordinates55 56 45 N 3 11 40 W 55 945918 N 3 194317 W 55 945918 3 194317 Coordinates 55 56 45 N 3 11 40 W 55 945918 N 3 194317 W 55 945918 3 194317InformationFormer nameGeorge Heriot s HospitalTypePrivate day school 1 MottoImpendo I Distribute Chearfullie Established1628 395 years ago 1628 FounderGeorge HeriotOversightGeorge Heriot s TrustChairman of GovernorsJoyce CullenPrincipalGareth WarrenStaffapprox 80Teaching staff155GenderCo educationalAge3 to 18Enrolmentapprox 1600HousesCastle Greyfriars Lauriston Raeburn Colour s Navy Blue White SongThe Merry Month of JunePublicationThe HerioterWebsitewww wbr george heriots wbr com Contents 1 Architecture 2 History 2 1 17th and 18th centuries 2 2 19th and 20th centuries 2 3 Modern era 3 Headmasters and principals 4 Other notable staff 5 Sports and extra curricular activities 6 Notable alumni 7 References 8 External linksArchitecture Edit George Heriot s School south side facing Lauriston Place rear The Quadrangle the north west turret in the centre The main building of the school is notable for its renaissance architecture the work of William Wallace until his death in 1631 5 He was succeeded as master mason by William Aytoun who was succeeded in turn by John Mylne 6 7 In 1676 Sir William Bruce drew up plans for the completion of Heriot s Hospital His design for the central tower of the north facade was eventually executed in 1693 8 The school is a turreted building surrounding a large quadrangle and built out of sandstone 9 The foundation stone is inscribed with the date 1628 The intricate decoration above each window is unique with one paired exception those on the ground floor either side of the now redundant central turret on the west side of the building A statue of the founder can be found in a niche on the north side of the quadrangle The main building was the first large building to be constructed outside the Edinburgh city walls It is located next to Greyfriars Kirk built in 1620 in open grounds overlooked by Edinburgh Castle directly to the north Parts of the seventeenth century city wall the Telfer Wall serve as the walls of the school grounds When built the building s front facade faced north with access from the Grassmarket by way of Heriot Bridge It was originally the only facade fronted in fine ashlar stone the others being harled rubble George Heriot s magnificent pile became known locally and by the boys who attended it as the Wark 10 In 1833 the three rubble facades were refaced in Craigleith ashlar stone This was done because the other facades had become more visible when a new entrance was installed on Lauriston Place The refacing work was handled by Alexander Black then Superintendent of Works for the school He later designed the first Heriot s free schools around the city The south gatehouse onto Lauriston Place is by William Henry Playfair and dates from 1829 The chapel interior 1837 is by James Gillespie Graham who is likely to have been assisted by Augustus Pugin The school hall was designed by Donald Gow in 1893 and boasts a hammerbeam roof A mezzanine floor was added later The science block is by John Chesser architect and dates from 1887 incorporating part of the former primary school of 1838 by Alexander Black architect The chemistry block to the west of the site was designed by John Anderson in 1911 8 The grounds contain a selection of other buildings of varying age these include a wing by inter war school specialists Reid amp Forbes and a swimming pool now unused A 1922 granite war memorial by James Dunn is dedicated to the school s former pupils and teachers who died in World War I Alumni and teachers who died in World War II were also added to the memorial History Edit Statue of George Heriot in the quadrangle 17th and 18th centuries Edit On his death in 1624 George Heriot left just over 23 625 pounds sterling equivalent to about 3 million in 2017 to found a hospital a charitable school on the model of Christ s Hospital in London to care for the puir faitherless bairns Scots poor fatherless children and children of decayit fallen on hard times burgesses and freemen of Edinburgh 11 12 13 The construction of Heriot s Hospital as it was first called was begun in 1628 just outside the city walls of Edinburgh It was completed in time to be occupied by Oliver Cromwell s English forces during the invasion of Scotland during the Third English Civil War When the building was used as a barracks Cromwell s forces stabled their horses in the chapel The hospital opened in 1659 with thirty sickly children in residence As its finances grew it took in other pupils in addition to the orphans for whom it was intended By the end of the 18th century the Governors of the George Heriot s Trust had purchased the Barony of Broughton thus acquiring extensive land for feuing a form of leasehold on the northern slope below James Craig s Georgian New Town This and other land purchases beyond the original city boundary generated considerable revenue through leases for the Trust long after Heriot s death 19th and 20th centuries Edit In 1846 there was an insurrection in the Hospital and fifty two boys were dismissed 14 This was the worst of several disturbances in the 1840s Critics of hospital education blamed what they described as the monastic separation of the boys from home life Only a minority 52 out of 180 in 1844 were fatherless which meant these critics argued that poorer families were leaving their children to Hospital care even through holiday periods and the influence of disaffected older boys Auld Callants former pupils were prepared to defend the Hospital as a source of hope and discipline to families in difficulties This argument about the value of hospitals which reached the pages of The Times in late 1846 15 was taken up by Duncan McLaren when he became Lord Provost of Edinburgh and therefore Chairman of the Hospital Governors in 1851 McLaren pushed for the number of boys in the Hospital to be reduced and for the Heriot outdoor schools to be expanded with the resources thus saved 16 Duncan McLaren was the primary initiator of the 1836 Act that gave the Heriot Governors the power to use the Heriot Trust s surplus to set up outdoor i e outside the Hospital schools 17 Between 1838 and 1885 the Trust set up and ran 13 juvenile and 8 infant outdoor schools across Edinburgh 18 19 At its height in the early 1880s this network of Heriot schools which did not charge any fees had a total roll of almost 5 000 pupils The outdoor Heriot school buildings were sold off or rented out some to the Edinburgh School Board when the network was wound up after 1885 as part of reforms to the Trust and the absorption of its outdoor activities by the public school system 20 Several of these buildings including the Cowgate Davie Street Holyrood and Stockbridge Schools were designed with architectural features copied from the Lauriston Place Hospital building or stonework elements referring to George Heriot 21 George Heriot s Hospital was at the centre of the controversies surrounding Scottish educational endowments between the late 1860s and the mid 1880s At a time when general funding for secondary education was not politically possible reform of these endowments was seen as a way to facilitate access beyond elementary education 22 The question was for whom those who could afford to pay fees or those who could not The Heriot s controversy was therefore a central issue in Edinburgh municipal politics at this time In 1875 a Heriot Trust Defence Committee HTDC was formed in opposition to the recommendations of the Colebrooke Commission on Endowed Schools and Hospitals set up in 1872 These included making the Hospital a secondary technical day school using Heriot money to fund university scholarships introducing fees for the outdoor schools and accepting foundationers from outside Edinburgh The HTDC saw this as a spoliation of Edinburgh s poor to the benefit of the middle classes 23 Already in 1870 under the permissive Endowed Institutions Scotland Act of the previous year and again in 1879 to the Moncreiff Commission on Endowed Institutions in Scotland and finally in 1883 to the Balfour Commission on Educational Endowments Heriot s submitted schemes of reform All were turned down The reasons included Heriot s continuing commitment to free and hospital education and its maintenance of the Heriot outdoor schools after the passage of the Education Scotland Act in 1872 brought in publicly supported compulsory elementary education The Balfour Commission had executive powers and used these in 1885 to impose reform on Heriot s The Hospital became a day school charging a modest fee for boys of 10 and above Up to 120 foundationers no younger than 7 years of age enjoyed preferential admission Greek was not to be taught The new George Heriot s Hospital School was in other words to be a modern technically oriented institution The outdoor school network was to be wound up and the resources used for a variety of scholarships and bursaries including a number to be used for attendance at the High School and University of Edinburgh These rather than the new Heriot s day school were to provide a path to university education for those able and interested 24 There were elements in this scheme of a response to contemporary European educational reforms such as that exemplified by the German Realschulen 23 The most uncontroversial aspect of the Balfour Commission s scheme of 1885 for the reform of the Heriot s Hospital and Trust was the takeover of the Watt Institution and School of Arts by the Trust 25 This was to be renamed the Heriot Watt College This was not just a matter of the Trust providing financial support but was part of a policy of encouraging technical education in Edinburgh Provision was especially to be made for pupils to continue their studies after completing the higher classes of the new Heriot s day school The School and the College were both run under the Heriot board of governors until the development and financial needs of the College required a separation in 1927 The Trust continued to make a contribution to the College of 8 000 p a thereafter 26 In 1966 the College was granted university status as Heriot Watt University In 1979 Heriot s became co educational after admitting girls In the same year Lothian Regional Council attempted to bring the school in to the local authority system but the Secretary of State for Scotland intervened 27 Front view of Heriot s Hospital Modern era Edit In the early 21st century George Heriot s has approximately 1600 pupils It continues to serve its charitable goal by providing free education to children who are bereaved of a parent such children being referred to as foundationers 28 In 2012 the school was ranked as Edinburgh s best performing school by Higher exam results 29 Heriot s Hospital Edinburgh by Henry Fox Talbot 1844Headmasters and principals Edit Rugby team of Serbian students at George Heriot s school in 1918 Chronological list of the headmasters of the school the year given being the one in which they took office 30 1659 James Lawson 1664 David Davidsone 1669 David Browne 1670 William Smeaton 1673 Harry Moresone 1699 James Buchan 1702 John Watson 1720 David Chrystie 1734 William Matheson 1735 John Hunter 1741 William Halieburton 1741 John Henderson 1757 James Colvill 1769 George Watson 1773 William Hay 1782 Thomas Thomson 1792 David Cruikshank 1794 James Maxwell Cockburn 1795 George Irvine 1805 John Somerville 1816 John Christison 1825 James Boyd 1829 Hector Holme 1839 William Steven 1844 James Fairburn 1854 Frederick W Bedford 1880 David Fowler Lowe 1908 John Brown Clark 1926 William Gentle 1942 William Carnon 1947 William Dewar 1970 Allan McDonald 1983 Keith Pearson 1997 Alistair Hector Thereafter the title of Headmaster was changed to that of Principal 2014 January Gareth Doodes 31 2014 September Cameron Wyllie Acting 2014 December Cameron Wyllie 32 2018 January Mrs Lesley Franklin 2021 August Gareth Warren 33 Other notable staff EditJames Craik Classics c 1822 to c 1832 John Watt Butters Maths 1888 to 1899 James Stagg Science 1921 to 1923 Donald Hastie Games 1949 to 1979 34 Hastie was reportedly the first full time games master in Scotland 35 Ray Milne French and German 1974 to 1978 Sam Mort English and Drama 1997 to 2001 36 in 2021 Unicef chief of Communication Advocacy and Civic Engagement in Afghanistan 37 Sports and extra curricular activities EditFormer pupils clubs the Heriot s Rugby Club and Heriot s Cricket Club carry the School s name and use the School s Goldenacre grounds George Heriot s School Rowing Club competes at a national level and is affiliated to Scottish Rowing There is a pipe band and around 120 pupils take tuition of some kind 38 Notable alumni EditSee also Category People educated at George Heriot s School Carving of a 17th century classroom with a dominie and his ten scholars Positioned at the school s main entrance the motto reads DEVS NOBIS HAEC OTIA FECIT God hath given us this leisure Academia and Science George Alexander Carse 1880 1950 physicist dux in 1898 J W S Cassels FRS 1922 2015 mathematician Henry Daniels FRS 1912 2000 statistician Robin Ferrier 1932 2013 organic chemist Sir George Taylor botanist 1904 1993 Sir Thomas Dalling 1892 1982 Professor of Animal Pathology at Cambridge and Chief Veterinary Officer to the United Kingdom John Borthwick Gilchrist 1759 1841 Indologist Professor Sir Abraham Goldberg 1923 2007 KB MD DSc FRCP FRSE Emeritus Regius Professor of Medicine University of Glasgow 39 Professor Hyman Levy 1889 1975 FRSE Scottish philosopher mathematician political activist Sir Harry Work Melville 1908 2000 FRSE polymer chemist and administrator 40 Professor Hamish Scott FBA FRSE b 1946 historian Professor Gordon Turnbull b psychiatrist Professor Douglas C Heggie b 1947 FRSE Personal Chair of Mathematical Astronomy School of Mathematics University of EdinburghMedia and Arts Nick Abbot b 1960 Talk Radio presenter Ian Bairnson b 1953 musician member of Pilot and The Alan Parsons Project Emun Elliott b 1983 actor Gavin Esler b 1953 television journalist and presenter of Newsnight 41 Mark Goodier b 1961 Radio One disc jockey 41 Mike Heron b 1942 musician formerly of the Incredible String Band Roy Kinnear 1934 1988 actor 41 Duncan Hendry 1951 2003 Chief Executive of Aberdeen Performing Arts and of Edinburgh s Capital Theatres 42 Iain Macwhirter b 1953 journalist and Rector of the University of Edinburgh 2009 2012 Henry Raeburn 1756 1823 painter 41 Ian Richardson 1934 2007 actor Mike Scott musician b 1958 musician and composer founder of The Waterboys Alastair Sim 1900 1976 actor 41 Ken Stott b 1955 actor 41 Bryan Swanson b 1980 Sky Sports chief reporter Nigel Tranter 1909 2000 historical novelist 41 Robert Urquhart 1921 1995 actor Charlotte Wells film director 43 Paul Young actor b 1944 actorLaw and Politics Tasmina Ahmed Sheikh b 1970 SNP politician 44 James Mackay Baron Mackay of Clashfern b 1927 Advocate and former Lord Chancellor 41 David McLetchie 1952 2013 former leader of the Scottish Conservatives 41 Doug Naysmith b 1941 Labour politician and former MP for Bristol North West Keith Stewart Baron Stewart of Dirleton HM Advocate General for Scotland Gordon Prentice b 1951 Labour politician and former MP for Pendle Stephen Woolman Lord Woolman b 1953 Senator of the College of Justice Kenneth Borthwick CBE DL JP 1915 2017 Lord Provost of Edinburgh 1977 to 1980 Chairman of the 1986 Commonwealth Games Sir Adam Wilson 1814 1891 15th mayor of Toronto member of the Legislative Assembly of the Province of Canada 45 Sports Bruce Douglas b 1980 Rugby Union player Charles Groves 1896 1969 cricketer Andy Irvine b 1951 Rugby Union internationalist 41 Iain Milne b 1956 Rugby Union player 41 Kenny Milne b 1961 Rugby Union player 46 Robert More b 1980 cricketer John Mushet 1875 1965 cricketer Gordon Ross b 1978 Rugby Union player Ken Scotland b 1936 Rugby Union internationalist 47 48 Polly Swann b 1988 Member of the GB Rowing Team and Rowing World Champion Douglas Walker b 1973 sprinterMilitary Colonel Clive Fairweather 1944 2012 2nd in command of the SAS during the Iranian Embassy siege 49 David Stuart McGregor 1895 1918 Scottish recipient of the Victoria CrossReligion Graham Forbes CBE b 1951 Provost of St Mary s Cathedral Edinburgh Hector Bransby Gooderham 1901 1977 priest of the Scottish Episcopal Church Gordon Keddie b 1944 Reformed Presbyterian minister and theologian James Pitt Watson 1893 1962 theologian and Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland Brian Smith bishop b 1943 Bishop of Edinburgh Scottish Episcopal Church 2001 2011Other James Aitken aka John the Painter 1752 1777 mercenary 50 Hippolyte Blanc 1844 1917 architect 51 Archie Forbes 1913 1999 CBE Colonial administrator Norman Irons b former Lord Provost of Edinburgh 41 Sir Andrew Hunter Arbuthnot Murray 1903 1977 former Lord Provost of Edinburgh Stuart Harris 1920 1997 architect and local historian 52 References Edit George Heriot s School Edinburgh City Scottish Schools Online Archived from the original on 4 April 2013 Retrieved 13 May 2013 Facilities and Staff George Heriot s School Retrieved 13 May 2013 George Heriot and his Bequest George Heriot s School Archived from the original on 12 May 2017 Retrieved 13 May 2013 Governance page on official website accessed 16 April 2018 Colvin Howard 1978 A Biographical Dictionary of British Architects 1600 1840 John Murray ISBN 9780719533280 Colvin Howard 1978 A Biographical Dictionary of British Architects 1600 1840 John Murray pp 569 70 ISBN 9780719533280 McWilliam Colin Walker David Gifford John 1984 The Buildings of Scotland Edinburgh Penguin pp 179 82 a b McWilliam Colin Walker David Gifford John 1984 The Buildings of Scotland Edinburgh Penguin p 180 Architectural Detail and Tower George Heriot s School Archived from the original on 15 May 2017 Retrieved 13 May 2013 Entry and example from The Scotsman of 3 September 1910 for wark Dictionary of the Scots Language Retrieved 13 January 2021 Lockhart Brian 2003 Jinglin Geordie s Legacy East Linton Tuckwell p 326 ISBN 1 86232 257 0 National Archives Currency Converter 1270 2017 Retrieved 11 January 2021 Dewar William 5 February 1979 Letter to the Editor The Scotsman Gilbert William Matthews 1901 Edinburgh in the Nineteenth Century J amp R Allan p 116 London Times 26 December 1846 Retrieved 14 January 2021 Lockhart Brian 2003 Jinglin Geordie s Legacy East Linton Tuckwell Press pp 151 159 ISBN 1 86232 257 0 Mackie J B 1888 The Life and Work of Duncan McLaren London Nelson pp 133 138 Vol 1 Rodger Richard 2001 The Transformation of Edinburgh Land Property and Trust in the Nineteenth Century Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 112 113 ISBN 978 0521602822 Bedford Frederick 1878 History of George Heriot s Hospital and the Heriot Foundation Schools Third Supplement ed Edinburgh pp 3 26 Stephen Walter 1996 Fabric and Function A Century of School Building in Edinburgh 1872 1972 Edinburgh Hills of Home private p 22 Rodger Richard 2001 The Transformation of Edinburgh Land Property and Trust in the Nineteenth Century Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 115 ISBN 978 0521602822 Anderson R D 1983 Education and Opportunity in Victorian Scotland Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press pp 168 201 ISBN 085224617X a b Report on public meeting Edinburgh Courant 15 October 1875 Scheme for the Management of the Endowments known as George Heriot his Hospital and the Watt Institution and School of Arts London Hansard Parliamentary Papers 5 June 1885 pp paras 27 56 Scheme for the Management of the Endowments known as George Heriot his Hospital and the Watt Institution and School of Arts London Hansard Parliamentary Papers 5 June 1885 pp paras 57 75 Lockhart Brian 2003 Jinglin Geordie s Legacy East Linton Tuckwell Press pp 267 268 ISBN 1 86232 257 0 McConnell Tom 12 September 1980 Younger in move over Heriot s The Glasgow Herald p 3 Retrieved 9 August 2022 Foundation400 Retrieved 17 November 2022 Private schools up to mark with best ever exam results Archived from the original on 5 March 2016 Retrieved 22 July 2015 Jinglin Geordie s Legacy 2009 Brain Lockhart ISBN 978 1862322578 page 333 Appointment of Principal George Heriot s School Retrieved 13 May 2013 Appointment of Principal George Heriot s School PDF Retrieved 16 December 2014 Announcement from David Glen Chairman of the Board of Governors 31 December 2020 www morrisonsacademy org Retrieved 4 August 2021 Donald Hastie The Herioter 9 11 July 1979 Lockhart Brian 2003 Jinglin Geordie s Legacy East Linton Tuckwell p 279 ISBN 1 86232 257 0 The Herioter 2001 Edinburgh George Heriot s School 2001 Scots aid worker stays in Kabul to continue working with Unicef The National Retrieved 6 September 2021 The Royal Scottish Pipe Band Association Archived from the original on 4 June 2012 Professor Kenneth McColl Professor Henry Dargie 19 May 2008 originally published sans commentary by McColl amp Dargie in The Herald 9 October 2007 Obituary Professor Sir Abraham Goldberg Physician scientist and academic PDF Royal Society of Edinburgh Retrieved 30 November 2008 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link permanent dead link Gowenlock Brian G B J Aylett J C Bevington D C Bradley T S West W P Richards A G Hector 18 August 2004 Obituary Sir Harry Work Melville PDF Royal Society of Edinburgh Archived from the original PDF on 4 October 2006 Retrieved 30 November 2008 a b c d e f g h i j k l Spellbinding times at Heriot s The Scotsman 13 August 2009 Retrieved 28 October 2018 Duncan Hendry obituary ISSN 0140 0460 Retrieved 18 March 2023 englishGHS on Twitter Wonderful to see KermodeMovie putting Aftersun written and directed by former George Heriots pupil Charlotte Wells as best film of 2022 A terrific film moving and unforgettable Twitter Retrieved 2 January 2023 Leask David 1 June 2015 Analysis SNP bucks trend for privately educated MPs The Scotsman The Law Times London The Law Times 1892 p 151 My Life in Rugby Kenny Milne former Scotland amp Heriot s hooker 25 October 2016 The Official Website of The British amp Irish Lions History Ken Scotland British and Irish Lions Archived from the original on 24 October 2008 Retrieved 30 November 2008 Connor Jeff 22 February 2001 Giants of Scottish Rugby Edinburgh Scotland Mainstream Publishing ISBN 978 1 84018 478 5 Obituaries Colonel Clive Fairweather Daily Telegraph 15 October 2012 Retrieved 15 October 2012 Holgate Andrew 15 February 2005 Biography John The Painter by Jessica Warner London The Times Online Retrieved 22 December 2008 Hippolyte Jean Blanc Retrieved 9 March 2014 Stuart Lowe Harris Dictionary of Scottish Architects Retrieved 31 May 2021 External links Edit Media related to George Heriot s School at Wikimedia Commons Official website Profile on the Independent Schools Council website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title George Heriot 27s School amp oldid 1147356175, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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